 Justin, would you say that it is fair to call your path, your road to the National Football League, the one less traveled? Yeah, you could say that for sure. It's been quite a ride. Every job I ever took or every experience I had starting out as a player and then moving up to the coaching ranks, it's gotten me to where I am today. Whether it was a high school coach and learning how to put equipment together and manage different types of personalities and making sure not only are grades good but also are the families are good with those high school kids as a high school coach and teacher. All those things kind of set me up for where I am today because at the end of the day we're all teachers. It doesn't matter if it's the NFL or college or high school, it's what can you do to bring the best out of each player. If they're playing fast and you're teaching the right things in the classroom, good things happen. Justin, you stay in Atlanta for two years and then you join Matt LaFleur in Green Bay. Tight end coach. What was that experience like and what did you learn that sort of added to your football knowledge that really sticks out now? I think the most intimidating thing was walking into a position room that you knew was your first position job in the NFL and Mercedes Lewis and Jimmy Graham are the two cornerstones in that room. And I'm sitting there going, what can I teach these guys? They've been playing longer than anybody have ever been around and Mercedes Lewis happened to be my age. And just sitting down with those guys and they understood real quick where I was coming from. I'm there to help them. I'm there to help develop whether it's just football or it's just life. And I think what I learned most out of that year was it's not about X's and O's. It's about what's going on outside the walls. What can you do to bring more of a clear mind to the players by either talking through some issues or allowing them to learn in a different way or a different aspect of just life. But not everybody learns the same either. Whether you're 38 years old and you're trying to teach a guy off a PDF or you're actually going through a walkthrough. Those are the things that popped up that year. Justin Outten, you had a lot of opportunities after the season and you chose to join Mike Variable and the Tennessee Titans as the running back coach and the run game coordinator. Why was this the right spot for you and your family? You know, going through the interview tour, meeting with Mike for the first time, I had a lot of respect for this organization and the way he ran his team because you look at each and every time we played them in the past. It was always going to be a fist fight. You had to play your best every snap. And interviewing with Mike, you saw it come out. You saw why the players play hard for him. You see the leadership qualities. And I wanted to be a part of that. I wanted to learn from a different style of coaching. You know, him, he does a great job with not only the players but the coaches themselves. And, you know, he's really in tune with the offense, defense and special teams. And he's still learning and he admitted that. And that was awesome for me to hear because if you feel like in his position, you can easily say, well, I'm the head coach. I'm going to just kind of deal with the overall organizational thing and then kind of deal with issues as they pop up. He's continuously learning. And I was fired up when he gave me the opportunity just because I wanted to be a part of that. All right, so let's wrap up with this, Justin, out. You're nearly 40. Could you have ever imagined the ride and where it would have taken you in different places when you left Central Bucks West and went to Syracuse and you've ended up in the National Football League with a prominent position? And I know your ultimate goal is to be a head coach in the National Football League. Could you have ever imagined? I could imagine. And, you know, I tell my wife nearly every week that we were just blessed for the situations that we've been in and we try to take advantage of it as much as we can. But, you know, moving the kids around and moving her around, you kind of see the entire country. You kind of, you see the different lives and aspects of just everything and how people go about their business. The accent changes and all those things, but it's been quite a ride. It's just kind of seeing the country being a part of different organizations. And, you know, you could easily look back and say, wow, this has been quite a ride. But if you look back, you'll lose focus on where you are. And if you look forward, you're going to do the same thing. Justin, out. Thank you so much for the time. I appreciate you. Appreciate it. Thank you.